Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd Dynamic Range

Sail Port Stephens 2025 Passage Series - Overall

by Sail Port Stephens Media 6 Apr 07:19 BST 31 March - 5 April 2025

It was a fitting finale to the 2025 Sail Port Stephens Passage Series (Commodores Cup), with crews aboard the 105 yachts enjoying the kind of premium sailing conditions that attracts boats from as far as the Gold Coast and Melbourne to the event.

An 18-knot westerly provided plenty of horsepower at the downwind kite start off Nelson Bay, with sport boats such the Thompson 920 Road Runner soon surfing across Shoal Bay at 18 knots.

David Hamilton's Farr 40 Seeking Alpha had, by its lofty consistency standards, a relatively ordinary day on the 16.5 nautical mile course out around Little and Cabbage Tree Islands. But the crew's strong performances across the previous four days of tight racing saw them secure both PHS and ORC honours in Division 1.

"We've enjoyed every single moment, the racing and the hospitality, it's been phenomenal," Hamilton said. A highly experienced yachtsman with international silverware in Farr 40s, Farr 30s and Melges classes in his trophy cabinet, Hamilton was delighted to add a Commodores Cup to his collection.

"It's very technical in the Bay with the tides," he agreed. "I spent a lot of time lake sailing in Switzerland, Italy, France and Germany and it's as technical here as it is there."

In Division 2, Greg Brand and his crew from the Cronulla Sailing Club on Brand X won the battle against fellow Beneteau First 40.7 Schouten Passage from the Newcastle Cruising Yacht Club. Sail Port Stephens regulars Drew and Pete Van Ryn in their Farr 44 Sea Hawk, made it a first and third from Cronulla.

Ataraxia from the Newcastle Cruising Yacht Club remained the boat to beat in Division 3 and owner Scott Knights and his crew capitalised on the Jeanneau 3200's strengths to secure PHS honours.

"Even though it was fresh in the first couple of days it was flat water so we were able to put up bigger sails," he recounted. "It's been fantastic," he continued. "The standard of sailing is pretty high and it's fun at the same time, plus its really convenient for people coming up from Newcastle and Sydney."

After chalking-up two bullets during the first two days of the regatta, Matt Doyle's Beneteau Sense 50 La Troisieme Mi-Temps slipped back to third in the overall Division 3 standings, while David Ashton's Archambault 35 Absolut slotted into second.

With a podium result up for grabs in Division 4, Richard Fleck and his crew on Scuffy made a strategic call to divest some of the cruising comforts on the Beneteau Oceanis 37.

"We finally decided to get serious," Fleck laughed. "We had hot showers to get the water tanks down a bit, but then we decided to take-off the outboard, the dinghy, two spinnakers and the life raft as well, that was the heaviest item. I reckon we got 150 kilos off the boat," he confided.

Summer Salt, Tim Gleeson's Beneteau First 36.7 from the Newcastle Cruising Yacht Club, pushed the Scuffy team all week and had to settle for second, with Slac-N-Off, Martyn Colebrook's Jeanneau Sun Odyssey 39i, never far behind in third.

With four podium placings from five outings John de Meur's fears of his Jeanneau 30 349 Elysium not featuring during the predicted lighter winds weren't realised. John and his crew from the Middle Harbour Yacht Club in Sydney recorded the most impressive scorecard in the regatta: 1, 1, 1, 5 and a 2 to win the Non-Spinnaker Division.

The pace was definitely on the Super 40 Division with MC38's, a Kerr 40, Mat 1220 Bushranger and other serious race boats mixing it on the scenic inshore and offshore courses. But it was Peter "Box" Geddes' Thompson 920 Road Runner from the Lake Macquarie Yacht Club that saw off the hot competition and took home the trophy.

Sail Port Stephens Regatta Director Paul O'Rourke rated the 2025 edition as one of its most memorable: "There was a good variety of winds which gave everybody a reasonable chance of doing well in their conditions," he said.

"It was a bit wet the first few days but sailors are typically resilient and eventually the trademark sunshine arrived. The onshore social events were really enjoyable and the race management team did a great job, getting racing in every day," he added.

Dates for the 2026 Commodores Cup Passage Series are April 13-18.

Sailors can also look forward to the Performance Racing Series, a three-day event scheduled 25-27 April 2025 at Port Stephens. The event includes the prestigious NSW Yachting Championships (IRC), Rob Hampshire Cup (ORC), Act 3 of the TP52 Gold Cup (TPR and IRC), and the new Super Racer Cruiser division (IRC).

From 2-4 May, the Sail Port Stephens Bay Series will feature the Australian Sports Boat Association NSW Title, J/70 class racing and off-the-beach classes.

Sail Port Stephens is supported by the NSW Government via its tourism agency Destination NSW, Port Stephens Council, Pantaenius Australia and subsidiary sponsors.

Full results available here.

Related Articles

Revised dates & format for Sail Port Stephens 2023
The iconic Commodores Cup series is being extended to five days Sail Port Stephens (SPS) is revamping its event schedule and revising dates for racing in April and May 2023, having outgrown the previous week-long format that remained largely unchanged since its inception in 2008. Posted on 30 Sep 2022
Sail Port Stephens overall
Spectacular week of racing comes to fading finish As so often happens in yacht racing, the story is denied a fitting finish due to a lack of wind when it's needed most. And it was certainly the case at Sail Port Stephens today, with a predicted 10-knot sou'easter failing to materialise. Posted on 10 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 6
Change as good as a holiday on Sailebration Saturday The best laid schemes of mice, men and race committees often go awry, especially in the fluid environment of yacht racing, and Day 6 of Sail Port Stephens 2022 was one of those days. Posted on 9 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 5
Pantaenius Sail Port Stephens Trophy Series off to a bright and breezy start Pessimists were predicting showers and light winds but the optimists and opportunists seized the day as the Pantaenius Sail Port Stephens Trophy Series and NSW Yachting Championships got off to a mostly bright and breezy start. Posted on 8 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 3
Commodores Cup finale is yacht racing at its best Queensland has Surfers Paradise, NSW has Sailors Paradise. It's located just outside the headlands of Port Stephens, where a cluster of Hawaiian-style islands from the set of Jurassic Park create an idyllic racecourse for yachts Posted on 6 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 2
Postcard conditions as paradise finds some breeze They say history never repeats but a 'lightening' breeze can certainly strike twice, as 120 yachts competing in Sail Port Stephens' Commodores Cup Race 2 discovered today. Posted on 5 Apr 2022
Sail Port Stephens Day 1
Off to gentle start and bunched finish Rarely has there been a parting as sweet as watching 120 yachts slide down a sparkling Port Stephens under spinnaker in Race 1 of the 2022 Bannisters Port Stephens Commodores Cup. Posted on 4 Apr 2022
2018 Sail Port Stephens day 7
Huey has the final say After six days of sublime sunshine and sailing, a wild westerly has put paid to any further racing across all divisions, leaving overnight results standing. Posted on 15 Apr 2018
2018 Sail Port Stephens day 6
Super Saturday of Sail Port Stephens 2018 was as good as it gets If you like your sailing fast and flat, with uninhabited islands and surfing beaches added for good measure, then Super Saturday of Sail Port Stephens 2018 was as good as it gets. Posted on 14 Apr 2018
NSW IRC Championship day 1
Patrice toasts champagne conditions at Sail Port Stephens Fittingly for a fleet boasting Wild Oats X for the first time, the NSW IRC Championships at Sail Port Stephens enjoyed champagne sailing conditions on the offshore race course for three windward-leeward races on day one. Posted on 13 Apr 2018